Mr Coutts
New member
Im in the market for a tractor, and the chinese tractors are so cheap at the moment,been looking at tractors with about 30 to 45 hp,must have a 4in1 bucket a slasher, I have 15 acres of nearly flat land in nsw Australia.
Fluid i here you, but i really need to save a lot of bucks.lol
They said the same thing about both the Korean and Japanese made cars back in the 60's and 70's. Now look at the market - the Japanese are in the lead and the Koreans a close second (I am ignoring the European brands deliberately). The major US car companies are still in trouble over their sales practices and policies, where as the foreign companies have done very well.
I wanted a new tractor - not one that someone else had manage to damage . I didn't want to buy someone else's problems in the major brands. New was much too expensive for me in the major brands - three to four times as expensive.
For me, the Jinma has worked out fine - my only regret is having not bought a tractor with a cab (I have an open station one). Digging snow at -20C without the benefit of a heated cab is somewhat painful.
As long as a person buys with their eyes open, does a lot of research and is mechanically inclined, a Chinese tractor can be a good buy. And for the record, it has been easier for me to buy parts for the Chinese tractor I own (haven't had to buy too many parts) than it was to buy parts for the 1959 MF65 tractor that I owned for several years.
Don't disregard the Chinese because of "rumours" - do some research. You will find all tractors have problems. Currently there are brand new John Deere 55** series tractors (big bucks) with brake problems that John Deere seems to want to do nothing about.
Which is better US made John Deere or Chinese made Foton, Dong Feng, Jinma etc.
Your perception is not reality. As you can see, the Japanese are not "in the lead" and the Koreans are not a "close second" - at least in the United States automobile market.
2014 US Car Sales by Manufacturer Market Share:
17.8% - General Motors
15.3% - Ford
13.9% - Toyota
12.5% - Chrysler
9.3% - Nissan
8.7% - Honda
4.2% - Hyundai
3.5% - Kia
The remainder of the manufacturers are single digits - some less than 1% of the market.
I won't comment on the remainder of your post - but, your "facts" are equally suspect, and are really more personal opinion than information that can be backed up with hard numbers.
Rule # 1 : You get what you pay for...
Rule # 2 : You can pay now, or pay later
Rule # 3 : Cheap isn't optional equipment
For me, the Jinma has worked out fine - my only regret is having not bought a tractor with a cab (I have an open station one). Digging snow at -20C without the benefit of a heated cab is somewhat painful.
Currently there are brand new John Deere 55** series tractors (big bucks) with brake problems that John Deere seems to want to do nothing about.
Which is better US made John Deere or Chinese made Foton, Dong Feng, Jinma etc.

Well if you really want a tractor built in China you could always buy a John Deere built in one of their seven Chinese factories.
It is most certainly an over simplification to lump all Chinese produced tractors together. There are dozens of Chinese firms building tractors and other AG equipment and in that group there is bound to be the good , the bad and the ugly. The problem then becomes finding out which factories are making the highest quality products and sort out those making castings from pot metal.
They are developing there AG sector very fast and the government is pushing things forward which probably is where some of the problems lie.
While they sort that out I'm going to stick with Green as they have the ability to coordinate an Indian casting holding American machined gears over a Chinese axle.!